Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Some Skiers Can Avoid Surgery for ACL Tears

About a quarter of recreational
skiers who tear their anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) on the slopes can be
successfully treated without surgery, according researchers at Hospital for Special Surgery in New York City. Their article
appears online ahead of print in the journal Knee Surgery, Sports
Traumatology, Arthroscopy.

The study found that at 6 to 12
weeks post-ACL tear, results from 2 tests that involve only the physical
manipulation of a knee can identify skiers with a torn ACL who will recover
without surgery.

The researchers examined records of
patients treated between 2003 and 2008 to identify recreational alpine skiers
who were seen within 6 weeks of a first-time ACL tear. To be included, skiers
had to have ACL rupture documented on an MRI after the injury and a minimum of
2 years follow-up. Patients were excluded if they had injured ligaments in both
knees. They identified 63 acute, first-time skiing ACL tears; 29 of these
patients did not undergo an ACL operation.

The researchers then separated the
29 patients into 2 groups, those that had low-grade Lachman scores and negative
pivot shift tests, indicating a potentially healed ACL, and those that had
Lachman scores of 2+ and a positive pivot shift test indicating a damaged ACL.

Six to 12 weeks after injury, 17 of
the 29 skiers who did not have surgery had a Lachman score of 0 to 1 and a
negative pivot shift test. Six of these patients were lost to follow-up, but 11
returned for a study-specific follow-up evaluation at more than 2 years
post-injury. These patients completed questionnaires that gauged how well the
knee was functioning and how their ski accident had occurred. They also
underwent Lachman and pivot shift tests and a KT-1000 test to measure motions
of the shin bone relative to the thigh bone.

Skiers described injuring their ACL
in tumbles where the ski had rotated too far. Physical exams revealed that 10
of the 11 patients still had Lachman scores of 0-1 and negative pivot shifts
tests, and only 1 patient's scores had deteriorated to a Lachman Grade 2+. None
of the patients, however, complained about knee instability. Eight had returned
to skiing without the use of a brace; 3 no longer skied. KT-1000 test results also
were positive.

Comments

Probably should be a bit more clear to say:
"in alpine skiiers over the age of 30 who sustained a skiing injury to their ACL- ..."
Some folks will not catch that these were 30+ olds 29-58 mean 43 and injury was skiing related- These may represent a different set of patients - not similar to the traditional non-contact valgus collapse.

Posted by Terry Malone
on 2/22/2013 4:00 PM

Confused by your comment Terry.
That is is the entire premise of the article that it is a different mechanism from noncontact ACL injuries. The fact that these are skiing related is in the title of the research paper.
Sincerely,
Greg Fives PT

Posted by Greg Fives
on 6/19/2013 12:54 PM

Dear sir,
I had been to ice mall on oct 18 2013.I skided while i lifted my daughter 6 years old.My MRI shows high grade partial thickness tear at midsegment of ACL.Grade II longitudinal tear at anterior horn of lateral meniscus.But I had the instability of my leg on the day of the accident,but now i am able to walk with no instability.Whether i have to wait for 6 to 12 weeks for my ACL recovery.Please suggest me in this regard.